_. . V1,... “JbmwyL-m,“ s, ..» .... a‘ was v l. i ' l ‘.1 I / ~ THE CHARIIOTTEPOWN GUARDIAN m‘ ,-----~ - — ' "”_'""""" we must nothiorget that it was the ls b GEROIIS A TITQR- fliiiimfiibi éu°bm°“vu°"é”lv.fb ‘£11 "- ‘T " ' federation. Mr. Bennett trusted I there were some L" ‘ amonghis l -. hearers; to them he would draw at- . tention to this fact, not in a narrow partisan sense, but purely as a matter of history. We came into Confederation with very definite promises given wtih respect to con- tinuous service for the conveyance TOOW .1 tr l r‘ ' “You didn't have a son who was killed iii the war?" of mails and gers between the ‘ .. Island and the mainland, and to CHAPTER s7 ‘ll the placing of the Island in con- tinuous communication with the In- A GOOD yAR" WASTE” tercolonial Railway. Uptfllflwcer- tain eflorts had been made in that one of the qunnuel on which direction, but it W88 110$ until 1911 Herbert prided himself was his per- fect composure under the most try- ing circumstances. He was convinc- ed that he knew how to carry of! that we were able to overcome the diillcuities to our trade and com- merce which the narrow gauge rail- way imposed upon us. In that long period of Liberal rule at Ottawa we struggled along under this handi- cap, and when the day came that that administration ceased to be. we were still without a car ferry. We recall the promise which Sir Robert Borden made with respect to the car ferry, and the manner in which it was carried out. But do we realise that if ‘that promise had not been promptly kept by the Bor- den Government, with the War that followed, we should have had no cal ferry here until 1922 or 1928? (Ap- piause.) - Conservative Achievements. any situation. Sc, on this occasion, he regarded the strange man who proclaimed himself to be Mia's uncle from‘ South America, with an air oi poi-' ite interest and concealed his net-I ural amazement. This was not at all the sort of person whom he would have selected as a relative of his wife; nor could he reconcile the ap- pearance of his caller with the neg- ligent gesture that had given ten thousand dollars to charity. "I am _very happy to meet you, sir," he said, as he extended his hand cordially. "Will you come up to the smoking-room for a cigar and a glass of something that need not necessarily be ginger ale?" A wistful look flashed across the stranger's face. ‘He shook his head Flies! Moslquitoesl Restless days! Sleepless nights! Not if you spray Flit. Flit spray will rid a whole house in a few moments of disease-bearing insects. Flit l also penetrates the cracks where roaches, bed bugs and ants hide and breed, destroying their eggs. Deadly ta insects. Harmless to you. Will not stain. Never confuse Flit with any other product. Greater killing power in- sures satisfaction with Flit. One of the largest corporations in the world guarantees Flit to kill insects, or money back. Buy Flit and ‘a Flit Ibuinlflfi "Stretching the back exercises economy-ll it's a greenback." lion. It. B. Bonnet Continued From Page .1 Another of our problems has been the inadequacy of the federal grants to enable this Province to carry on; tage that you have in the back- ground and tradition of history that l i l s l - I l \<ifif<l RIVATE SALE OF FARM Beautiful farm. almost in city limits for sale, consisting of 60 acres of land. Good for dalrying or market gardenin . Cannot be excelled. City water within 50 feet of house. Will be sold with or without growing crop, and would like any purchaser to see quality of crop. - If not sold by private sale, will be offered by Public Auction with stock, crop, etc., at a. later date. In- spection any time. Apply to DUNCAN MacINTYRE, 0n Prtmlstfi a‘ clllll‘ MY » mY- 11 5981118 Only yei- h e our own problems here that lllge- blll 5° lllells~ ll W“ Slmllly ‘ ppened Canada or Canadian pro- An American commission was llimllllllclyllmllhllilf!» 111911? or I L MEQDONALD. THEWRE ALL PACKERS terday I left this town. and it's- tgych the me and welfare of the to__provide for the free entry of cer- ‘queers; "my we“; lggislaflng for sent to Western Canada, m decldg duty already on the statute . Auctioneer. “M”; o; gmcamls emu“, a" W811. Lila wasnt born then, and Island These naturally Should be tseen} needvzid ggogs Ignto tgw 2113193; the benefit of their own people ev- whether Canadians could grow wheat W111 110i 110 111811 #1101111! 101' ~ ~- " in the packing business, aren't mwfsllef marlled- F1811"? 1i- 01111 f0!‘ the most important maggers with ll 95g h e thll hllrgel g‘; g d ery time. This is sound political cheaper than in the United States; l l1 l8 11°17 11111911811 "-11? llkwlll 141 ghgy?" Yolllsell- which we have to deap Bu; there mellll w ell e c all es l“ e practice. While selfishness in pri- and when it was found to be the but simply because the Ame ~ Allonoll slur 1 am instructed by Mrs. Mur- doch McLeod to sell by auction on her farm at Hunter River un Sat- urday, August 18th at 1 o'clock sharp, the following crop, stock and ‘implements. 5 acres certified seed potatoes. 1 acre turnips, 14 acres standing oats. 3 stacks hay, 1 horse l1 years old, 1 IT SEEMS MUCH LARGER “You think a square yard is three square feet, eh?" "Of course, it is." "Did you ever try raking all the .ubblsh out of one?" "Yea-pretty nearly every man packs a gun." regretfully. “I don't want to put you in wrong, son. I'm persona non grate. around this place." _ "You've been here before?" “Once too often," his caller nod- ded ruefully. “I didn't think the board‘ of governors meant what they said until I hit the sidewalk." "I'm ‘afraid I don't understand you." "In plain words. then, I was kick- ed out." Herbert's horrified expression made him smile grimly. “But I'd like to talk to you- somewhere else." Herbert fetched his hat and coat, bade the hall porter summon a taxi. and bundled his caller into it with as much speed as was consist- ent with dignity. His head was in a whirl. He was resentful, too. Why hadn't Lila ever mentioned this blot on her ‘scutcheon? Arriving at his home, Herbert strove to be the polite host. He ushered his relative by marriage into the library and plied him with cigars. “Lila will be home presently." His caller sighed contentediy. "Meanwhile, you and I can have “You like South America?" asked 39111611 llolitely. "You've been very successful there, I understand.” The little man chuckled. “Not so you'd notice it. About all you can say is that I've kept my head above water." Herbert was puzzled. conversation, he said: “Your wife is with you, Mr. er- Condcn, isn't it?" ‘ , His caller looked up from his drink in surprise. “I have» no wife." "Pardon me," murmured Herbert To make is behind you? That background that cannot be bought for money; that tradition that many people would give fortunes to possess. 18 yours as of right." Our Canadian Citizenship- and it was through a Conservative Government that we received an increased subsidy cf $100,000. An- other achievement, it must be ad- mitted by anyone reading the pager oi‘ parliamentary history, has been the securing of four members in the Federal House to represent this Province, regardless of the unit of population. If that Conservative measu c had not been taken, with the great increase in population of With this heritage go conespond- ingly great obligations upon every citizen. The one thought that should be in all our minds on every occa- sion, and especially in the minds of sprayer today. i you spray the younger men and women of tins country, is not only for the welfare of the Island-mot only to make 11 easier and better for another gen- eration on this Isiand——but of Cana- da as a whole. It is not easy for men to see before them. 10 Vlfillflllze- the greatness oi a country like this the Western Provinces and of On- tario and Quebec, we should today be represented by three or possibly two members. ments, Mr. Bennot believed, which we should be proud to associate with the name of the Conservative party. These are achieve- The vital question of the market- FLIT Canadian mud-limos: ing of our products, so essential to an agricultural country lying close to a nation with such vast popula- tion as the United States, was dis- cussed. Mr. Bennett reviewed at length the history of the American terifi reforms which have resulted in practically prohibiting our pro- ducts from entering that country. In 1911, when the Reciprocity Treaty was offered, it was rejected by Canadians, and rightly so; for it was not a treaty to our advan- Dominion. Our citizens in the East- ern part of Canada are actually nearer to England than to thtlr fellow countrymen in British Col- umbia, so vast is Canada. And with our vast extent oi territory g0 resources unrivalled alnonfl 111619‘ sources of any peoples llvint 111 111° temperate zone. Wealth of every kind in the world we possess. and B11 this means vast responsibilities B1161 obligations. . Mr. Bennett was aware that we may be shut off by a great competi- tor, and tariff agreements termin- ated without notice; and once bit- ten, twice shy. A few years later, when the Wilson Government came into power, we were able advantage- ously to ship our goods into the United States under new tariff reg- ulations. But this arrangementdid are other problems as well; 111011- lems of a national character upon which we decide by our votes at ev- ery federal election. We should re- member the absolute equality which we enjoy in this respect under de- mocracy. All men are equal before God, for they have but one soul to save. And they are equal at the ballot box, the rich and the p001‘- The most powerful man in 0811111111 has no power at the ballot box that the poorest citizen does not P0559511- That very equality of voting power out our of our vate life is wrong, there is no suc- cessful government that is not sel- fish with respect to its own country. The dut with respect to policies is to Canada, and lto concerned about the United States or other foreign countries.. is a les STANDARD BRED not last for long. Emergency tar- ifis adopted by Congress again shut point is, said Mr. Bennett, that the American Congress did not care what FRED WHITLOW It CO. IJMITBD 16$ DUI-‘FBRIN STREET, TORONTO Wrrisht. 192i. Simon, he had ample opportunity of learning today? products and ruined some Canadian producers. The south. American Tariffs. Case. because we had new land to fzgmfland coulzclutrealize better crops‘ e ex en y of a Federal Government p “rm they til tOd Canada only. We are not ay you cannot Without Pnying 42 cents toil (“an e daor. And what about Cana- _ 11° 1008'? What is happenjn; That son which we surely have An American com . from our great neighbor to the comes down to Prince Edward ~ to find how much it is costing n grow our potatoes: and if they . that we are growing potatoes - . . Congress is passing laws for ~ American people. 1f they find “used our competition in potato prod - higher still the duty on wheat; umlis interfering with American . take a bushel ducers, the duty will be raised of Canadian wheat into the United ' 111811 ""1"!" l° "1"" '11 "*- l tarifl rates on hay, butter, eggs ~ (Continued on page five) ' HOR SE SALE l, 1 4 _ 2 _ .. necessitates a clear apP19°19'l'-l°l: E i i inlrezrabiiaiiel delattlefnil-lcll‘ yzzi-vsold A MEAN TlllcK gilfilleldthflI had not heard of her“ and urbidersgllngiriigenpgcrrglé; gtbfillitgals N E, l’ cattle. 3 calves, about 60 hens, some Miss Lady Bug: I think you nuns’ ecau ‘ chickens, 1 binder, 1 mower, 1 hay fork, cable and pulleys, 1 rake, 1 seeder, 1 3 11. P. engine, threshing outfit. cleaner and shaker, 1 spring. tooth harrow, 1 disc. harrow, 1 spike tooth rrow, 2 plows, 1 potato killer, 1 potato scufller, 1 cart and wheels, 1 truck wagon, 1 driving sleigh. 1 wood sleigh, 1 driving wagon, 1 set driving harness, 2 sets working harness, 1 incubator, l brooder, 2 heaters, 1 Daisy Churn, quantity shingles and sculntiing, quantil, rubber hose. Other articles too numerous to mention. Positively no reserves. Terms made known at sale. Should the weather prove unfav-L orable the sale will be held on Mon- ouqht to be ashamed of yourself, Wlilie Locust, to make love to me and then leave me for seventeen yearai "But I never had s. wife. True. I nearly married s. nice girl, here in New York, twenty-five years ago-a friend of Lila's mother. But then the trouble came along, and I had to skip." Herbert. was staring at him. "You didn't have a son who was killed in the war?" His caller set down his glass. “No. Certainly not." Herbert had risen and was pacing the floor agitatedly. "Then. why, Mr. Condon-pardon all these personal questions, but they have a. bearing on b, mgttgp or V1181 importance to me. Why did you send my wife ten thousand dol. iars to give to a charity for dis- abled soldiers in memory of your uninformed, that is uneducated. 15 a democracy that is dangemlls- Every young man and woman whq emits n, vote for a federal can- didate ln Charlottetown is castint‘ a ballot that has somethint w 1111 with the destinies of British Coi- umhia, of Alberta, of Saskatchewan. and of every other P101111" l“. Canada. That vote at a federal el- ection is not a vote for a member who represents Charlottetown alone. That member. Whoever 119 may lle~ sitting in the Parliament oi Cana- da, may vastly influence or affect policies that may b11118 ilnlfiperlly or ruin not only to Prince Edward Island but to other parts of the Do- minion. Hence it is that our out- Bay Mare, woonronn WILKES BONIQUEEPS two and It costs no more time BONIQUEE—2.05%—4338 CAN. Pacer. 24155/ NIQUEE by 10s ward lnlllerb individuality, size, and fast record. Buy 2221i". {lie sire of the . hi d D g RUBEN by MAMBRINO rarcnnlv 5;". MILFORD STATION, N. S. CHARLOTTETOWN FAIR _WEEK (P. E. ISLAND) Beginning IUIIII-ib ELEVEN O’CLOCK M. W EDNES DAY, 22nd AUGUST 19281 "UNBEATABLE" DAN PATCH 115554. , __ Second Dam: LlllNA WILKES by ADRIAN WILKES 6560. Fourth Dam: REG. v01; 21 'A‘. T. R.“ n» row 4905'! by BON VOYAGE 39813 out of WELLADY, Dam: OENONE b! MAMBBINO look must be wider than the Pro- BONSET——CAN. REG. 4339—‘—MARI'iIME YEARLIN G y SE NSATION Bay Filly. fouled a 'l10t 192 . . .. above‘) l1" 11- 7 by Lolvusbr 15.06%; by DILLON AXWORTIIY. Dam: BONIQUEE 2mm Sllll?" ‘ ivince in which we live; we must Hls caller's 1111111111 0119116111 1111110" endeavor to lift our eyes to the hills. rllllsll" lto get a vision of wider fields, of the "Say, what do you mean? Did I greater Canada that is composed 11111191518115 You to say I gave ten not of one province, but of nine; thousand dollars to something?" of that vast territory extending “You did." . from Vancouver to Cape Breton l. day at the same hour. P RUFUS STEVENSON. Auctioneer. I (Std 8-14-31. BONSET royally b" :’ 4o say nothing of BONIQUEES superb jnmymuuuy, - - “he 1185. and will at alny time trot an eighth better than‘ 18 soc. although l “Jack aald he slab’: like my bath- “l” "’ l1“ Y“ l-"Bc and hand some and , as kind as can be Sh | . . The little man chuckled. th t holding in fee. oi which _ HORSE REVIEW.’ and the "HAMILTONIA - - ' " s "°“'l'"‘°11 1n ‘T1113 s l '"l,,',‘j'§;I' "If I ever had ten thousand cents we“ all: bill life tenants. As we N AND Gbulb FUTl-llllTlES- I “Bu! h’ ‘and m“ he mud m.’ all at once. I'd put it in an old sock administer in our lifetime this great , 101111111 Anrll 16th, 192s, full brother to norlsumyislao, mu | Bull’ l“ l" 111-11 "kistratlon and number not, BREEDER," and "raorrun abs PACER." ru-runrrlss. and llelllle l°1 1119-" iheritage, so will those who come It seemed to Herbert that the alter us be able to enjoy it with room was swimming round him. He happiness and content, 0r with 11n- sank into a chair and mapped his happiness and disharmony through forehead. difilculties which we may have plac- "Theres some mistake s0me- ed in their way. where," he muttered feebly. His in- teiligence was tolling him where the mistake was, but he fought against; believing it. _ loutsldo of’ that." AT CAPE TRAVERSE l___ COLT. WHITE STAR. - 0011s even better than she did at his age. Application Just l“ "HORSE REVIEW". and "AMERICAN Fann of 1'70 acres, of which 150 is clear. balance covered with hard- wood and timber. Three streams of water run through this property. A modern dwelling house fitted with complete electric light, water system v and furnace, also a second dwelling house for farmer. A fully equipped fox ranch of ‘l4 l ‘ i pens including new sheds,. running i water in ranch. , This property is three miles from ‘Borden and one from Carleton Sid-l 1 ng. FALLING HAIR Minard's rubbed into i.he scalp four times a week arrests fail- ing hair, removes dandruff Two Phases of Government BELLE sanmu by avsnvkbrs ""4118 by usoaos wn.- by nvspvksrs HAMILTON- Tne government of o. coutry may "I'il say there is, if anybodys be considered from two standpoints. been telling you I went in for chari- There is the administrative side of ties. I'm the finest object for char- government, the gathering in of lily you overlaid your eyeswm. Lis- taxes, the spending of money, the 11911. S011. I've been living from hand building of piers and wharves and l0 111911111 nearly twenty-five years. I railways, the expenditure generally had a lot. of money once, after my of the revenues. On the otherhancl father died, but. like a fool, I ran there is that side of government through it, got into trouble, andlwhich has to do with the shaping had to skip. My sister, Lila’s rroth- of great policies, with the formula- . er. was a brick. She stood by me tion of plans, with putting in the and. little by little sent me all she'd statute books measures not only af- inherited. I understand there wasntfecting today but tomorrow. It is 11 Denny left for her child when shelbecause we are prosperous today. it died. There you have the financiafis because on this Island we are record of a rake in a nutshell!" enjoying a measure of prosperity as Herbert got unsteadily to his feet, great if not greater than any part "I'm afraid I'll have to ask you to of the country, that there is thrust excuse me. I . . _ “m, well _ _ _ upon us larger and greater respons- something . . ." ibilities. President Coolidge has The door opened suddenly. Lila, pointed out that many people can stood on the threshold. stand adversity, because it tries the (To Be Continued.) fibres and sinews of their souls: but few people can and promotes growth. IIAMILTONIAN. Third Dam: ~ KES. Fourth Dam: (macs w IAN. DAISY TODD has never taken a record, or 11m h w||| fore ktlock. which does not affect her at ordimtdilyfiofidedrlvlnzoisnldalln sound’ o" “Mimi. o! a. slight P0110 1111111 11nd" she is n. "n, consmgm shnw mun", “m! is clean “imbed as the day Sh: :1: rllmczab: unless she is started at speed. about 1075 _ _ - ery neat and handsome, Munds and believed safe in foal to LONGSLT 2.08% by DILLON AXWORTHY. PETER -TODD-CAN. REG. 4340 31°11" 1°"- 1Ml¢<1 Ausust 19th. 1921, by darram auaalrv. Dam. "M" auaaev m; a chance m... this, he has proven um he can an, 8;“ TODD, (See above). 11'9""- 111010118111)’ broken and acts as though he will make a ‘god mm ETHEL AUBREY-—-LIGHT Fooled J I 16th, 192s f ' BAY FILLY" her dam." ilmlllll] rekisxlesllnacridmhetslnnlbelrulil? “w; an “mm, M“ m], md very “w” "llnl- Will be sold with __ - _ mm r n u ye to hand. Nominated in "nukes. asvlsw," "musicals- BREEDER and "raorrsn and racslt" FUTURITIEB. BARINGTON—CAN. REG. 4008 l W111“. 101M Me! Wh- 1911- b: roonmorou. p, . a good gelled trdtter, although not coming no“, "ll-mlzalsy TODD 3181, (see u“ ‘m. . ll y as the yoarllags, we Grounds. Charlottetown, and will be sold it Idol-loll on Wednesday the hum. “bf-ll, Ion account of business interests. W. DOUGLAS BELL. 7035-8- l 1 -stt4i. FOR‘ SALE VALUABLE FARM PROPERTY “Newstead” situated at Winsloe 82 acres of the best soil on the Island, in a high slate of fl-Illlvltlfln- Buildings consist of an excellent Stone Residence, Wooden “ung-alow for hired help, large barns, Cold Storage Plant, Electric Light and Water Plant. All buildings equipped with electric light throughout. Exceptionally well suited for For ltanching In addition to kenerai» farming. Situated flvc miles from Charlottetown Post Oliice on the main road to Sumrnerside. llas railway station within 200 yards of farm; Apfly tn THE EASTERN TRU ST COMPANY almanac seats Edwin o. Saunders When CAPTAIN ones. PETblt TODD ls a nice mannered Brown gpldihl. star, on hind foot 111ml- Tlwmrhly broken and think another year he will learn to These horses are at the Fair basil-nine at eleven o'clock, .4, M, C m“ 3:’ zelll” cl-"hmwvn Fllf. and the chances are "l" 7°11 "n 1111! lont or all of these at 7 "flu" 5' I l1"! 11111! made up my mind tosell them all, on ""1 11w w" tnlnlnr cans. lllllllilfil ma bum gear. . ,_ALFRED E. REID MILFORITSTATION‘ NOVA scam, ‘W b sfl-r 1.~ -. i» l l’ . *__—--—-—-———————--— stand prosperity. It is Import-Int. then, that with prosperity sweeping F the administrative side of govern- . ment-not only how money is spent. lnot whether taxes are high or low, .and with good buildings. Situated oh f g u, |f g u, ; m“; Loyalist Road. near station, ehurchweacster iezllerlnlieesaln nnulilnlilullrlic llfe lobe school. Will sell with or wlth- u,“ m, ,,|,,.,,|,,, mg noun", "l"- seloully, the national fabric of this HAROLD W. PROUD! country. New Wlltehko If today we are enjoying prosper- over us we should consider not only M1 “m "l l5 "1"- ‘ll °l°*"°1l'-bul those larger policies "Ill af- wln vhndlns crw- ‘Chub for quick coruclously, and sometimes uncon- ity as an integral part of Canada, a Ill-cod.